American Journal of Epidemiology Vol. 144, No. 1: 51-58
Copyright © 1996 by The Johns Hopkins University School of Hygiene and Public Health
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Correlation Between Systolic Blood Pressure and Physical Development in Adolescene
1Department of Clinicai Studies, Radiation Effects Research Foundation Nagasaki, Japan
2Department of Statistics, Radiation Effects Research Foundation Hiroshima, Japan
3The Third Department of Internal Medicine, Nagasaki University School of Medicine Nagasaki, Japan
Reprint requests to Dr. Masazumi Akahoshi, Department of Clinicai Studies, Radiation Effects Research Foundation, 8-6 Nakagawa 1-chome, Nagasaki 850, Japan.
Although the close relation between blood pressure and physical development in adolescence has been established in cross-sectional and comparative cross-sectional studies, the entire trend of systolic blood pressure (SBP) during adolescence has not been elucidated in conjunction with physical development in a longitudinal study. Blood pressure (mmHg), body weight (kg), and body height (m) were measured annually for 418 subjects in Hiroshima and Nagasaki, Japan, from age 10 (1955 or 1956) through 18 years (1963 or 1964). The Gompertz growth model was used to determine the velocity of weight increase (VEL) during that age period. The relations between SBP from age 10 to 18 and VEL, weight, height, body mass index (BMI; weight/height2, kg/m2), and the age at which the measurements were made were investigated individually using random-coefficient growth-curve analysis. The SBP trend for the 10- to 18-year age period could be shown by the following prediction equations: for the 163 Hiroshima males, SBP = 82.38 + 0.89 VEL at age 1.15 years prior to the current examination (VEL (age - 1.15)) + 1.40 BMI; for the 57 Nagasaki males, SBP = 92.70 + 1.07 VEL (age - 1.15) + 0.79 BMI; for the 148 Hiroshima females, SBP = 104.88 + 1.63 VEL (age - 1.15) + 0.05 BMI; for the 50 Nagasaki females, SBP = 113.62 + 1.67 VEL (age - 1.15) - 0.59 BMI. VEL 1.15 years prior to the current examination was significantly and positively related to SBP in each city by sex group (p < 0.01), and current BMI was significantly related to SBP for males in Hiroshima (p < 0.01) and nearly so in Nagasaki (p = 0.06), but not for females in either city (p = 0.84 and 0.13, respectively). Because the plot of VEL was a convex curve, SBP peaked approximately 12 years after the peak in VEL and then decreased in both sexes. The entire SBP trend during adolescence can be expressed as an equation of VEL and BMI in males and of VEL in females. SBP does not increase linearly with age. Am J Epidemiol 1996; 144: 518.
adolescence; blood pressure; body mass index; body weight; growth